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The Drum Beat 516 - Communication, Media, and Development Policy Blogs

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516
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The Drum Beat 516 contains these highlights:

 

 


 

 

Whether we look at development from the perspective of statistics, capacity building, or who is in charge, it is vital that policymakers and practitioners critique and debate a range of policies, ideas, and strategies.

 

This issue of The Drum Beat alerts you to new and recent blog postings, as well as comments on those postings, that put forth ideas with different perspectives on development effectiveness. These posts appear in our Communication, Media, and Development Policy blog space - click here.

 

Please read the full blogs and enter your comments and critique on the ideas expressed within them. Plus, please let us know by sending an email to drumbeat@comminit.com if you would like to become a CI blogger!

 

 


 

 

RATE EACH BLOG

 

There is a 5-star rating system available for each blog post. You can rate the blog post according to the question "How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work?"; ratings range from "Awesome" (5 stars) to "Poor" (1 star).

 

Please take a moment to rate each post after reading - this will serve to provide new readers, and the bloggers themselves, with a sense of how relevant the posts are to your development work.

 

 


 

 

1. Nobel Intentions

Competing high-level economic arguments with very different approaches to effective development action to reduce poverty - what are the communication and media development implications, and which approach do you prefer?

READ AND COMMENT: click here.

 

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2. Government Rules!

The arguments for and implications of a recent shift in focus by two major development agencies to prioritise development action and support revolving around government.

READ AND COMMENT: click here. 

 

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3. Northern Lights

Northern actors, thinking, and venue with a focus on southern (Africa and South Asia) development contexts, issues, and challenges - is this the way to go?

READ AND COMMENT: click here.

 

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4. Show me the Media Money - but what should we do with it?

What should be the media development investment strategy? A consideration of promising strategies currently being implemented in Latin America, pulling out a set of 9 principles for dialogue and debate.

READ AND COMMENT: click here. 

 

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5. Little Green People

Launching from a September 2009 article on "Ending Africa's Hunger", this piece brings together statistics on development progress and concludes that "the more technology we have the less impact on development results".

READ AND COMMENT: click here.

 

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Become a CI BLOGGER!

 

Do you have experience in development policy issues and challenges? Do you have ideas you want to float past a large group of your peers? Become a CI Blogger.

 

See the Guidelines for Bloggers on the Communication, Media, and Development Policy website: click here.

 

 


 

 

 

ACCESSING BLOGS BY ONE CONTRIBUTOR

 

Got a FAVOURITE CI BLOGGER? You can view (and mark as a "Favourite" in your browser!) all of their blog posts in one page. Simply go to the right column on the Communication, Media, and Development Policy Blogs site and click on "Contributors", then click on the name of your favourite blogger. A list of all posts by that blogger will be displayed.

 

 


 

 

6. COMMENTS RELATED TO "Governance and the Media: the engagement gap" by James Deane

 

"I worked for eight years as a foreign reporter in Vietnam and for the last two have been trying to rally the donor community to support media reform here. Vietnam is a one-party state and media freedoms are extremely limited. However, growing corruption that the Communist Party recognises as a threat to its long-term stability has been growing and the government has begun to ask the media to 'help' it uncover corruption - a job very few journalists here are able to do well after decades of state control. The donors see this linkage between media development and anti-corruption as a way in to dialogue with the government about media reform and, on the face of it, appear very keen to become more heavily involved. Yet..."  Click here for more.

 

READ ADDITIONAL COMMENTS, AND CONTRIBUTE YOURS: click here.

 

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7. COMMENTS RELATED TO "Re-vamping UNICEF's Africa Communication for Development Strategy" by Neil Ford

 

"Neil Ford suggests re-vamping UNICEF's Africa Communication for Development Strategy in order to improve impact and achieve results. He suggests two strategic changes: (1) to focus on only few broad communication methodologies and (2) to focus on partnership development at the community level. Both suggestions are logically correct, however when Neil is telling us what to do, he is not telling us how to do it. Historically, there were several attempts in UNICEF to go to scale in communication, but only few attempts included sustainability mechanisms..." Click here for more.

 

READ ADDITIONAL COMMENTS, AND CONTRIBUTE YOURS: click here.

 

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8. COMMENTS RELATED TO "Show me the Media Money - but what should we do with it?" by Warren Feek 

 

"...Why not let the local organizations define what the appropriate strategies and means are and simply respond to their requests ? Eventually taking some risks and betting on imagination and energy rather than sticking to artificial "logical" frameworks ? The "excuse" of Northern unique expertise does not even hold anymore..." Click here for more.

 

READ ALL COMMENTS AND CONTRIBUTE YOURS: click here.

 

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Other RECENT BLOG POSTS on a variety of topics:

 

"A gutsy new DFID White Paper puts the politics back into development" by James Deane add your comments below the blog!

 

"Another Development" by Ricardo Ramirez and Wendy Quarry add your comments below the blog!

 

"Donors, Governance and Media Aid: Some Thoughts from Sierra Leone" by Bill Orme add your comments below the blog!

 

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UTILISE RSS!

 

Ensure that you are alerted to new blogs and/or comments. Click on the [RSS] button under "Comments on Blogs" or "Recent Posts" within the right column of the Communication, Media, and Development Policy Blogs site.

 

 


 

 

ARCHIVED POSTS

 

Wondering where that recent post from "X" on governance and media went to? Click on the right column "Recent Posts" for a complete list of posts, in order of date updated.

 

 


 

 

9. COMMENTS RELATED TO "Can we put a value on the good that media do? A social cost approach to media development" by James Deane

 

"James, I find your analysis very intriguing. I really hope media development actors especially from the Western world would heed this message. Just recently here in Timor-Leste, a trainer from one of the more known media development institutions from the US was training media practitioners from community radio stations. She was emphasising the need for the community radio stations to be sustainable in the long run. The usual template regarding advertising etc. She gave the example to getting restaurants to advertise. One participant asked that how would they ask the only restaurant in that town to advertise? It is a case of using the old jargon without even looking at context..." Click here for more.

 

"I agree to most of the comments, one question is, is there an example in the world where 'public media' and private/civil society media have worked together for a common outcome, or is this still an untold story. Who should the donors support?..." Click here for more.
 

 

"I will like to seek further clarifications on this aspect of your article.

QUOTE:

Channel 4 was set up 20 years ago as a public service broadcaster designed as a complement to the BBC. It would get some public subsidy but it was designed to become increasingly sustainable from the income it derived from advertising. Two decades on it faces unprecedented financial crisis and is lobbying strongly for a share of the BBC licence fee to keep it going. The BBC itself has depended on year-on-year subsidy for more than three quarters of a century!

UNQUOTE

Is the real problem with Channel 4 not with the top management and their take-home? Do you think if the management model of Channel 4 is re-engineered it will not survive?..." Click here for more.
 

 

READ ADDITIONAL COMMENTS, AND CONTRIBUTE YOURS: click here.

 

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10. COMMENTS RELATED TO "Whose Policy is it Anyway?" by Warren Feek

 

"...I think the lack of non involvement of developing country governments and people in setting the international development agenda, has little to do with lack of awareness of the need to do so, or with ignorance of how it can be done. It is more to do with the power relations that permeate development assistance - and if we look at it from that perspective, understanding the different trends in India and China is not difficult..." Click here for more.
 

 

READ ADDITIONAL COMMENTS, AND CONTRIBUTE YOURS: click here.

 

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11. COMMENTS RELATED TO "Little Green People" by Warren Feek

 

"If improvements are to be realised at grassroots ordinary farmers innovations should be supported and technology development should be guided by this. Otherwise all efforts will only serve to increase the gap btwn the have's and have not..." Click here for more.
 

 

"The cell phones are the technology that keep people in contact, but they had a undesirable impact in the South, Africa and Latin America. Gangs and bands use that technology for kidnapping, robbery and other crimes. Drugs dealers and mafia are using communication systems in the edge...People that earn less than a dollar/per day had expended 6 to 10 dollars in cellular phone services... Is this progress? But it is very good business..." Click here for more.
 

 

"...you are hundred percent right that cell phone or the modern day technological advancements contribute a lot towards the increased crime rate but you must be aware that each and everything has merits and demerits and its not the device or invention itself, but the person who uses the device. Now the cell phone or other devices, you referred to, undoubtedly are being used for illegal activities but , the same are also being used by the law enforcing agencies. its the same like a knife, which is used for cutting fruits and vegetable but at the same time can cause death if used the other way. Owing to this, we can not stop having more inventions and advancements, rather what we need to do is to educate more and more people and create an environment, where these crimes are not committed...." Click here for more.
 

 

"The Patel et al. article is based on a fundamentally flawed premise: that technology use and knowledge are opposed. Quite the contrary is true. They cite for example the case of farmers abandoning the use of other soil amendments when fertilizers are used. Yet agronomists agree that the ideal situation is to use whatever soil amendments and organic sources of nutrients you have on hand and then to complement them with fertilizer to make up for the missing nutrients. Without going into detail, Africa's soils are naturally poor and rapidly being degraded (it has been estimated that the nutrient loss every year has a cost equivalent of some USD 4 bn in Africa). So clearly abandoning other soil amendments altogether is not based on sound knowledge, or there is another reason (i.e. the organic matter may be being used for fuel or something else)...The relevant point is that we have got to move away from dogmatic black/white positions..." Click here for more.
 

 

"I read with interest your Development Conundrum and, when it came out, the original article). I think the real problem...is a kind of either-or mentality. Either hi-tech, or subsistence farming. There has to be a middle way, but it is very hard indeed to advocate for such a position, when extremists have a much simpler story to tell. This is as true of development as it is of politics. What is disappointing is that when a fresh source of funding and thinking comes on stream and is effectively captured by one of the extremes..." Click here for more.
 

 

READ ADDITIONAL COMMENTS, AND CONTRIBUTE YOURS: click here.

 

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INTERACT WITH CI BLOGGERS

 

 

Have you read a blog through The Drum Beat that you agreed or disagreed with? Let the blogger know! Go to the Development Policy website and click on "Post a Comment or Question" below any of the blogs.

 

 


 

 

The Editor of The Drum Beat is Kier Olsen DeVries. Please send material for The Drum Beat to The CI's Editorial Director - Deborah Heimann dheimann@comminit.com

 

The Drum Beat seeks to cover the full range of communication for development activities. Inclusion of an item does not imply endorsement or support by The Partners.

 

To reproduce any portion of The Drum Beat, click here for our policy.

 

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